Education.com

Homeschool and Work Permits (page 2)

By Wes Beach
Homeschool Association of California

When you request a work permit from a school district, you'll be expected to provide some basic information about the schooling situation of the person who's applying for the permit. It may be enough to write a note on letterhead paper that reads, "John Doe is a full-time student in good standing at Sunshine High School. He has found a job and needs a work permit. We are requesting that you issue one for him." The work permit may be issued without any problem.

If there is a problem, it may result simply from school officials not knowing the full scope of their responsibility. Show them the excerpt from the letter from Mr. Millan and/or the Education Code sections cited above. If they still balk, contact the Labor Commissioner's office in a major city for a confirmation of what the law says. Locations are listed at http://www.dir.ca.gov/dlse/DistrictOffices.htm; the San Francisco office is at (415) 703-5300.

Unfortunately, if the school district people are opposed to your way of schooling rather than simply unaware of what the law says, they may refuse to give you a work permit. (The laws consistently say that work permits "may" be issued.) Short of hiring an attorney, you can only hope that being persistent and applying whatever pressure you can will help. You can contact me to ask for HSC support.

Just so you know all the facts around this issue: Sections 1391 and 1391.1 of the California Labor Code establish a number of restrictions that govern work performed by people under 18; these restrictions have mostly to do with hours of work. Section 1391.2(a) then says that these restrictions do not apply to anyone with a diploma or a CHSPE Certificate. In November of 1997 I called the state Labor Commissioner's office in San Francisco and asked if this means that there are no restrictions on the work that minors with a high school diploma may perform, and the answer was, "Yes."

Sections 49100-49183 of the Education Code comprise a chapter titled "Employment of Minors"; regulations regarding work permits are included in this chapter. Section 49101 states that the provisions of the chapter do not apply to anyone with a high school diploma or a CHSPE Certificate. Minors who have graduated from high school do not need work permits.

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